1 / 17

Chapter 9 Section 2

Chapter 9 Section 2. Progressive Legislation. Political Machines. As Progressive reformers gained popularity they were d riven out of power or forced to work with them to improve city life. Utilities.

hyman
Download Presentation

Chapter 9 Section 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 9 Section 2 Progressive Legislation

  2. Political Machines As Progressive reformers gained popularity they were driven out of power or forced to work with them to improve city life.

  3. Utilities Cities took control of utilities (such as water, gas, and electricity) away from monopolies who charged too much.

  4. More Power to Voters 17th Amendment – Said citizens, not the state legislature, choose their U.S. Senator. Initiatives – By getting a certain % of voters’ signatures the proposed law will be put on the ballot in the next election.

  5. Power to the People Referendums – Citizens can petition that a law passed by the legislature be “referred” to voters for their approval or rejection. Recall – Voters can remove public officials from office before the next election.

  6. Fire March, 1911 a cigarette ignited a fire on the 8th floor of a shirt company. Doors were locked to prevent theft so 146 people died. City appointed fire inspectors, mandatory fire drills, and had to unlock and fireproof exits.

  7. New Labor Laws Companies often brought the government to court because they claimed they had no right to interfere with how they ran their companies as long as employees agreed to it.

  8. Minimum Wage Massachusetts was the first state to require a minimum wage in 1912. Many states followed soon thereafter.

  9. “Square Deal” Teddy Roosevelt’s slogan for his Presidency because he claimed to negotiate fair deals for both unions and company owners.

  10. Threat of Force TR threatened to use the army to seize and operate the mines (In 1902) because the owners refused to negotiate with the striking mine workers. Without coal the nation would not have any heating fuel.

  11. Arbitration When an impartial (not for either side) 3rd party decides on a legally binding solution. You have to accept their decision.

  12. Pure Food and Drug Act and Meat Inspection Act Required: • Accurate labeling of ingredients. • Strict sanitary conditions. • A rating system for meats.

  13. Anti-Trust Action A court action taken to break up monopolies because there were many trusts that controlled a lot of smaller companies that needed to be supervised. (Done 42 times by the government)

  14. Largest Trusts Beef, oil, and tobacco companies.

  15. Environmental Protection Created national parks like Yellowstone (1872 in WY) and Yosemite (1890 in CA). Created the U.S. Forest Service. Put aside 200 million acres of land for forests, mineral reserves, and water projects.

  16. Department of Labor A new part of the government created to protect women and children in the workplace.

  17. 16th Amendment Created an income tax which collected more money from the wealthy (before relied on tariffs which pushed up the price of goods).

More Related